Month: April 2020 (Page 1 of 2)

Technical Difficulties

UPDATE: It seems we might be up and running with Read Aloud#3! If anyone can confirm that, please let me know in the comments below or by email. Many thanks!

 

Good evening!

It’s been great to hear from so many of you…and happy that you’re all trying to watch the read aloud, Lifetime. 🙂

I’ve been in touch with the people who can help, so now we just have to wait. I’ll let you know as soon as it’s available!

Enjoy the evening and thank you for your patience,

Mrs. H.

Lifetime Averages

Good morning!

If you watched our third read aloud yesterday, you’ll know we need to have our math brains on this morning!

As I say in my read aloud video, I love words and stories, but I am also a big fan of Math! In the book Lifetime we learned about different animals around the world and the number of times they will do something in their lifetime. The author uses averages to figure out how many beads a rattlesnake will add to its tail or how many sets of antlers BC’s mountain caribou will shed in their lifetime. Averages are only the typical or usual amount and there will, of course, be some animals with more or less than what we learn in the book.

You could write a book like Lola Schaefer if you can figure out the averages for these 2 animals. Add the numbers you have together, and then divide that amount by how many numbers you added together. Leave your answers in the comments below if you figure out the averages. Be sure to read the questions carefully! 🙂

  1. An average southern three-banded armadillo lives 14 years. Zoologists estimate that this armadillo will roll into a ball to protect itself 52 times a year. However, in the first 6 months of life, it doesn’t roll at all. Approximately how many times does an armadillo roll into a ball in its lifetime? Round your answer to the nearest hundred, please.
  2.  A female Florida bark scorpion’s life span is approximately 3.5 years (42 months). She will birth 2 broods of scorplings (baby scorpions) a year. Each brood contains an average of 47 scorplings. As soon as they are born, the scorplings crawl on their mother’s back for protection until they molt. How many scorplings will a female Florida bark scorpion carry on her back in one lifetime? Round your answer to the nearest 10, please.

Now that you can find averages, you could calculate what is the average number of times you brush your teeth in a week…or number of hours you read in a week…or how many times you smile each day…:)

Happy calculating!

Mrs. H.

Our Third Read Aloud!

Hello!

Our third read aloud is on the blog under Mrs. Hossack’s Read Alouds and you will have to get the password from your teacher if you haven’t already.

It’s a book called The Amazing Numbers in Animal Lives: LIFETIME. It is written by Lola M. Schaefer and illustrated by Christopher Silas Neal. Thank you to Chronicle Books for allowing us to share the book online.

Happy Reading! 🙂

Mrs. H.

 

Rainy Weekend

Good Morning!

It is a rainy weekend and there are lots of board games and baking going on in my house!

This morning, educator Adrienne Gear shared a document from @thelivbits. It is a great collection of many Authors and Illustrators that are sharing their stories, illustrations, ideas and fun to connect us during our time at home.

You can find it on the Authors and Illustrators page at the top for future reference, but you can also access it here. I was thinking it might be fun to explore on this rainy weekend…

Here are some Earth Day pictures and poems that Gokul, Div.9, and Elven, Div. 15, sent. Perhaps you could even do your own poem or illustration this weekend. I’ve got to run and try some muffins fresh from the oven…enjoy! 🙂 Mrs. H.

 

 

Ode to Living on Earth

Good morning!

The sun is back again!

I hope you all had a wonderful Earth Day yesterday and had a chance to get outside. I went for a rainy walk through a beautiful, flower-filled park with my daughter and basked in the scenery and the company. 🙂

Oliver Jeffers, another favourite author, had a bit of a different day. He recorded a Ted Talk and I’d like to share it with you here.

 

I hope you enjoyed Oliver Jeffers as much as I did.  He says,

“As we watch the wheels of industry grind to a halt, the machinery of progress become silent, we have the wildest of opportunities to hit the reset button. To take a different path.”

Please think about what this means and how you could take this opportunity. When life gets back to “normal”, what “different path” could you take that would show your kindness to our Planet Earth?

Drop me an email or comment below with your ideas or thoughts…

Be kind,

Mrs. H.

Happy 50th Birthday, Earth Day!

Happy Earth Day!

Fifty years ago today, on April 22, 1970, 20 million people celebrated the Earth in the United States, where Earth Day began. Today, at least 193 countries celebrate Earth Day and billions of people realize the importance of learning about and caring for this planet we all call home.

Just in case you’ve forgotten how beautiful our planet is while you’ve been safe at home, take a look:

Aren’t we lucky to live here? You can also watch a live-action version of that video just outside your front door. It might not be so grand or sweeping (and you’d have the chirping birds instead of the music!), but it’s just as awe-inspiring. Take the time today or tomorrow…or today AND tomorrow…and just sit for 15 minutes and observe. Use all your senses…inhale the fresh scents of Spring, touch the grass beneath your legs, look at the vibrant colours and shapes of flowers and leaves on the trees, listen for the sounds of new life…taste is the one sense you might want to wait to use until your veggie garden grows! 😉 Enjoy all our planet has to offer…

If you’re looking for other activities after you’ve soaked up the beauty of nature, here are some websites that offer ideas and information about respecting our planet.

50 Earth Day Activities for Kids on Tinkerlab.

A different view of our Earth can be seen on space.com .

National Geographic Kids is a great site to explore and it can be found here.

Finally, Earth Day’s gone digital with The New York Times.

As always, feel free to comment below to tell me about what you observed outside or just say hello!

Happy Earth Day, Clinton Thunderbirds!

Mrs. H. 🙂

Poetry and Song

Good morning!

As I write this blog post, the sun has come up and there is another beautiful, blue sky outside my window. Haven’t we been lucky to have such amazing weather to enjoy all the signs that Spring is here? I can picture the beautiful cherry tree outside Clinton school…:)

I also have some music on and I’m enjoying listening to poetry. Did you know that the songs we listen to are poetry set to music? Songwriters are poets? April might be poetry month, but you are listening to poetry all year long!

Below you will find a poem by Jane Yolen that has been set to music and it becomes…a song! Enjoy the sunny day and perhaps you will be inspired to write some poetry of your own to thank our Earth. Of course, please share it with me if you do!

Mrs. H. 🙂

Superworm!

Good Morning!

I have a new read aloud under the Read A loud page…you will need to ask your teacher for the password. 🙂

I wish I could have read Superworm  byJulia Donaldson with you…it has such great rhyme and rhythm. It’s a wonderful combination of poetry and lots of creatures on Earth! That fits in nicely, as April is not only Poetry Month it’s also Earth Day on Wednesday, April 22!

Watch below as Kwame Alexander talks all things poetry…enjoy!

Poetry Lessons from The Write Thing – | Teacher Created Materials

 

 

 

 

 

Friday Fun

Good morning, Clinton Thunderbirds! 🙂

One of the most circulated books in our Clinton Library is Where’s Waldo! Wouldn’t it be fun to have your own hunt for Waldo and friends at home? Candlewick Press  (the publisher of Where’s Waldo books) has made it possible! Print out your own Waldo Character Sheets to get started. They can be printed with a colour printer or you can print them and colour them yourself.  You could even draw them yourself! Ask an adult to hide them for you or you and your siblings could take turns hiding them for each other. Good luck! That Waldo is a tricky one…;)

 

Click here to check out some other Where’s Waldo activities such as a word search, colouring page or matching game.

Happy hunting!

And happy weekend! 🙂

Mrs. H.

The Undefeated

The Undefeated

Winner of the 2020 Caldecott Medal (for amazing illustrations)
A 2020 Newbery Honor Book (for a powerful story)
Winner of the 2020 Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award (for determination and courage to work together)

That’s a lot of awards! And very well deserved! Do you remember The Undefeated? It was on our library fireplace for quite a while, so I could talk to you all about it.  It was written by Kwame Alexander, one of my favourite poets/authors. If you’re in Intermediate, you might know Kwame for these books…

 

Booked (The Crossover Series)                  The Crossover (The Crossover Series)                      Rebound (The Crossover Series)

 

Kwame writes in verse (poetry) and we will be talking about poetry this month, as April is Poetry Month. Check back on our Library blog to learn more about poetry from Kwame himself. In the meantime, here he is reading/performing The Undefeated.

Enjoy! 🙂

Mrs. H.

PS…Congrats to Gokul who knew the answer was Seven!

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